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Discover LudwigThe phrase "surprised gaze" is correct and can be used in written English.
It can be used to describe someone who is looking at someone or something with surprise. For example: "The two friends locked eyes, each with a surprised gaze."
Exact(2)
In the Cheltenham Waterstones, I blushed as I extracted it from the fiction shelf under the surprised gaze of a Professor of Comparative Literature.
One primate that takes a lighter attitude to its offspring is the slender loris, its surprised gaze nicely captured by Sayantan Das of University of Mysore [Additional file 7].
Similar(58)
A two-page spread shows just how far he's come — wearing nothing but his stripes, he puffs out his chest and meets the reader's gaze with a slightly surprised and utterly joyful "Here I am!" expression.
Many other visitors were gazing at the invisible glass with surprised looks on their faces".
My friends and I found one another's gazes -- all of our eyes wide with surprised delight.
Subjects include Mick Jagger, dressed in women's clothes and gazing intensely into the lens; Iggy Pop, crawling naked next to a creek and looking surprised, but not disturbed; and a beaming Nelson Mandela.
Whose gaze?
I'm surprised everyone's surprised".
"We were all surprised".
"Very surprised," Mark Teixeira said.
People were very surprised".
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com